Publication | Open Access
Structure of the Vesicular Stomatitis Virus L Protein in Complex with Its Phosphoprotein Cofactor
84
Citations
43
References
2020
Year
Viral ReplicationEngineeringMolecular BiologyViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureProtein FoldingVirus GeneRna Structure PredictionVirologyRnp TemplateL ProteinConserved TryptophanStructural BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringMolecular VirologyPathogenesisPhosphoprotein CofactorSystems BiologyMedicine
The large (L) proteins of non-segmented, negative-strand RNA viruses are multifunctional enzymes that produce capped, methylated, and polyadenylated mRNA and replicate the viral genome. A phosphoprotein (P), required for efficient RNA-dependent RNA polymerization from the viral ribonucleoprotein (RNP) template, regulates the function and conformation of the L protein. We report the structure of vesicular stomatitis virus L in complex with its P cofactor determined by electron cryomicroscopy at 3.0 Å resolution, enabling us to visualize bound segments of P. The contacts of three P segments with multiple L domains show how P induces a closed, compact, initiation-competent conformation. Binding of P to L positions its N-terminal domain adjacent to a putative RNA exit channel for efficient encapsidation of newly synthesized genomes with the nucleoprotein and orients its C-terminal domain to interact with an RNP template. The model shows that a conserved tryptophan in the priming loop can support the initiating 5' nucleotide.
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